 Pleasure to be at Kotar Tech for inviting me to ask you Kotar. Just a quick outline on my presentation. It's quite long, so I'll just take to the first six or seven slides in just some time. But it has other reasons, we're about statistics and research, so it will be research and statistics heavy. To start with this table about internet use penetration in other countries. And if you notice, a country like Bahrain, internet use penetration is 26%, Kuwait 34%, Saudi Arabia 31%, UAE 68%, Jordan 16% and so on. Does internet users not internet accounts, which are basically our estimates based on how many people use the same ADSR connection or cable TV connection and similarly. Now what this tells us is that there is huge inter-country gaps between the penetration in the other countries, between the countries themselves. And also these numbers disguise the fact that also within the countries you have digital divides. For example in Jordan 90% of broadband connections are actually in the capital city of Amman, which has less than 50% of the population. Similarly in Egypt, the situation replicates itself across the middle income and poor countries in the region. In the Gulf states, most are wealthy, small city-states and therefore this issue is not as accurate as in other countries. Now with relatively low internet users penetration in the Arab world, the information revolution in the Arab world has actually been fueled by the 70s technology. I think that it was satellite TV that gave the Arab world its own information revolution rather than the internet. Although this is quickly changing as more broadband penetration and broadband levels increase in the Arab countries. When we ask internet users, Arab internet users, or rather internet users in the Arab world, because many of them are not, are not Arab, especially in the Gulf, what they use the internet for, email and searching for news information are the most widely used amongst the internet users in the Arab world that have to correct this. I will follow by downloading files and software, chatting and coming ahead of streaming audio and video. Streaming audio and video is probably not as popular as it is because of the bandwidth depth in the Arab region. We still define broadband connections in the Arab world as 512 kilobits per second or 256 kilobits per second. Whereas the norm now in the typical European house, Western European house, is to run the cable TV, telephony and 8 megabits broadband internet at 50 or 60 euros a month. In the Arab world in many countries, 60 euros a month is what you pay for, 250, 60 euros per second. The solution for that is more liberalization, more regulators, like I said before, are introducing competition, introducing liberalization, connecting the Arab world globally. Of course, when you compare and contrast with data abusers, they do compare to broadband users. Broadband users tend to spend more time doing the value added issues of internet use. Basically e-commerce, e-banking, e-government, much more widely used by broadband users than by data abusers, which further underlines the need for more broadband adoption in the Arab region. I will not bore you with our survey details. We did some surveys and Qatar joined a Kuwait level, Egypt and Bahrain today. A few of the countries where we did face-to-face surveys of users. Basically, the digital divide is vividly present here with the fact that when you ask cellular users whether they use the internet, a high proportion of cellular users use the internet. What you have usually in other countries is that people who use the internet tend to also use cellular use, cellular services and so on. So the penetration level is over that, which means a huge portion of the population, especially in poorer countries, don't have access to any of these technologies. More males than females use the internet in the Arab world. The young, of course, use the internet more than the old, that's pretty straightforward. This could come from the institute to research obvious matters. And of course, TV is basically, this is still TV land, the Arab world. Most people watch TV, the information age, the newspaper revolutions, Pyrrhaea actually, by 0, would not have happened without free-to-air satellite TV. And when it comes to free-to-air satellite TV, pay TV in the Arab world has had a very poor showing for multiple reasons. The first rule of which is, this is one of the few regions in the world, probably the only region in the world where people can get a $70 free-to-air satellite TV receiver and actually get great sports content, great entertainment series and many scenes and comedy shows, all free-to-air satellite TVs that are backed by deep pockets, be it government or private shareholding groups that want to have quality TV that's not paid. So the pay TV operators in the Arab world suffer from competition from free-to-air satellite channels, as well as from government piracy, especially in countries like Lebanon and Egypt, where a good 80% of pay TV connections are actually pirated pay TV connections. I have many more slides, I think it would be better for just for all of us to skip into the discussion and the discussion. So I'll end this and I thank you very much for your attention.